We have a new Windows PC graphics performance review ready for you here at Guru3D, it now often these days that a software house delivers a demo release a few days prior to the game release, as such Final Fantasy XV (2018) for Windows is being tested relative towards graphics card performance with the latest AMD/NVIDIA graphics card drivers. Many graphics cards are being tested and benchmarked. We have a look at performance with the newest graphics cards and technologies. The released FF XV demo can be considered as close to a final build as possible, with less than a week prior to the release. Where the benchmark release revealed all kinds of issues, the first level demo seems to behave quite well. Final Fantasy XV is a game utilizing the Luminous Studio. What is so unique about the game is that it is an open-world game that has story-driven aspects. The main concept behind Final Fantasy XV was "a fantasy based on reality", with the world being very similar to Earth and having fantasy elements gradually intruding into an otherwise normal setting. In pursuit of this, locations in Eos were based on real-world locations such as Tokyo, Venice and the Bahamas.

I like to make clear, the results in this article are NOT results made with the benchmark released a while ago, this is a manually played run in the first chapter of the game (demo). Thus this is based on real gameplay and thus in-game measurements. Check the FCAT video in this article for the measurement run to replicate if you'd like to.

This game offers nice graphics quality- it is an NVIDIA title as it is gameworks enhanced.

We'll test the game on the PC platform relative towards graphics card performance with the AMD/NVIDIA graphics card drivers. Multiple graphics cards are being tested and benchmarked with the latest cards such as the GeForce GTX 10 series included as well as the latest Radeon RX series 500 and Vega graphics cards. You are going to need a reasonably modern PC with at least a mainstream graphics card to run the game nicely. We test with the game based on the final release for PC / Windows from this week, all patched up combined with latest AMD Radeon Adrenalin and Nvidia drivers.

This article will cover benchmarks in the sense of average framerates, we'll look at all popular resolutions scaling from Full HD (1920x1080/1200), WQHD (2560x1440) and of course Ultra HD. UHDTV (2160p) is 3840 pixels wide by 2160 pixels tall (8.29 megapixels), which is four times as many pixels as 1920x1080 (2.07 megapixels).